Il6 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT. 
Leidv) was collected on Peace Creek by Mr. Joseph Willcox and was placed in 
the collection from Archer by mistake. 
1896. Dali, W, H.: 
(Account of the manner of occurrence of fossil vertebrates in 
the Alachua Clays.) Contained in introduction to “Fossil Verte¬ 
brates from the Alachua Clays," by Joseph Leidv and F. A. Lucas. 
W ag. Free Inst. Trans. Vol. 4, pp. xi-xiv, 1896. 
In this paper Dr. Dali states that the first to call attention to these fossils 
was Dr. J. C. Neal of Archer, who communicated with Professor Baird in 1883. 
The localities noted by Dr. Neal as reported by Dali were “(1) Mixon’s farm, 
ten miles south and one and a half miles east of the railway station at Archer 
(near Williston) ; (2) Hallowell’s place, ten miles north and two miles west of 
the station (near Half Moon) ; (3) pond, about a quarter of a mile from the 
station. Later Dr. Neal reports another about two miles northwest of Mixon’s, 
on a clay ridge in an old field.” 
1896. Cope, Edward D.: 
On some Pleistocene Mammalia from Petite Anse, La. Proc. 
Amer. Philos. Soc. xxxiv, pp. 458-468, pis. x-xii. 
In this paper, pp. 456-466, the horse from the Caloosahatchee River in 
Florida, which previously had been described as the type of the new genus 
Tomolobis Cope, is recognized as Equus fraternus. 
1899. Lucas, Frederick A.: 
The Fossil Bison of North America. Lb S. Nat. Mus. Proc., 
Vol. 21, pp. 755 -771, pis. 65-84, 1899. 
In this paper a reference to Florida occurs on page 767, where it is men¬ 
tioned that Bison latifrons has been reported from Peace Creek and from the 
Withlacoochee River. The exact locality is not given. 
1907. Hrdlicka, A.: 
Skeletal Remains Suggesting or Attributed to Early Man in 
North America. Bureau of Amer. Ethnology, Bull. 33, pp. 1 -113, 
pis. i-xxi, figs. 1-16, 1907. 
In this report all known occurrences of fossil man in Florida are reviewed 
and the probable geologic horizon discussed. 
1907. Vaughan, T. W.: 
Report on the localities at which were found the Fossil Flu- 
man Remains Found on Sarasota Bay. Bureau of Amer. Eth¬ 
nology, Bull. 33, pp. 64-66, 1907. 
